by
Dr Valery Uvarov
Department N13 - National
Security Academy - St Petersburg - Russia
Extracted from
Nexus Magazine, Volume 12, Number 2
February - March 2005
Evidence and eyewitness
testimony suggest the 1908 Tunguska meteorite was
destroyed by intelligently guided plasma "terminator
spheres" which utilized a technology that could
compensate for explosive forces. |
Let us return to 30 June 1908 and view all that took place through
the eyes of witnesses. The whole observed event developed according
to roughly this pattern. Around 7.15 am, the meteorite was moving on
a trajectory from southeast to northwest. In Preobrazhenka, I.
M. Volozhin saw moving across the sky "a belt of smoke with fire
flashing from it". That was the meteorite hurtling down to Earth.
1. The Generation and Release of the
"Terminator Spheres"
People in the area of Kirensk reported:
...a fiery pillar appeared to the
northwest, about four sagens [approx. 6 meters] in diameter in
the shape of a spear. When the pillar disappeared, five strong
brief bangs were heard, like cannon-shots following quickly and
distinctly one after another…
From the Teteria trading post, "pillars
of fire" were seen in the north. "Pillars of fire" were also
observed in other places (Kezhma, Nizhne-Ilimsk, Vitim) that do not
lie on a single line.
2. A Red Glow during the Generation of
the Spheres before the Explosion
The emergence of the terminators at the surface is the most
energy-intensive phase, causing the "energy pillars" and
"terminators" to give off a bright white light, like that produced
in welding. The intensity of the light was such that observers got
the impression that everything had faded or grown dark. Then, after
the emergence of a "terminator", the energy level of the process
changed (decreased) so that the "energy pillars" and "terminators"
turned red, lighting up the area of the coming explosion. Maxim Kainachenok, a 50-year-old
Evenk questioned in Vanavara, said:
...My parents had stopped on the
Segochamba. There the earth shook and there was thunder. At
first the redness appeared, and then thunder. The redness was
away from Vanavara. At the moment the meteorite fell, Uncle
Axenov went out to look after the reindeer and he said that,
first, everything above the site of the explosion went black,
then red, and after that they heard thunder...
Anna Yelkina, a 75-year-old Evenk woman
living in Vanavara, confirmed this:
Early, early in the morning... a
little higher than the sun, there was a crash of thunder. High,
high up. The whole sky was red, and not just the sky: everything
around was red—the earth and the sky. Then there was a mighty
thundering. A sound like a bell, like people beating a piece of
iron. The thunder went on about half an hour...
3. The Flights of the "Terminators"
Immediately after the appearance of the pillars of light (energy),
there appeared in the sky shining "terminator spheres" that began
flying towards the explosion site. Like many thousands of others who
were questioned, N. Ponomarev from the village of Nizhne-Ilimsk
reported:
At 7.20 am, a loud noise was heard
near Nizhne-Ilimsk that turned into peals of thunder... Some of
the houses shook from the blows. Many of the inhabitants saw
that before the thunder crashed, "some fiery body looking like a
log" hurtled rapidly above the ground from the south to the
northwest. Immediately after that there came the crash; and at
the place where the fiery body had vanished, "fire" appeared,
and then "smoke"...
K. A. Kokorin, an inhabitant of the
village of Kezhma, who was questioned by Ye. L. Krinov in 1930,
said:
Three or four days before St Peter’s
day, around 8 in the morning, no later, I heard sounds like
cannon-fire. I immediately ran out into the yard that is open to
the southwest and west. At that time the sounds were still going
on and I saw to the southwest, at roughly half the height
between the zenith and the horizon, a red sphere flying; rainbow
stripes were visible to the sides and behind it.
At that same time in Kirensk, people
were watching a fiery-red ball to the northwest, moving
horizontally according to some accounts, dropping steeply
according to others.
By the Mursky Rapids (close to the village of Boguchany) there
was a flash of bluish light, and a fiery body, considerably
larger than the sun, hurtled from the south leaving a broad,
bright trail…
4. The Interception of the Meteorite
The interception of the meteorite was accomplished by a "terminator"
striking it from above to reduce its original speed sharply. This
released a colossal amount of energy that, combined with the energy
of the "terminator", literally melted the substance of the
meteorite.
In the correspondent’s report by S. Kulesh, published in the
Irkutsk-based
newspaper Sibir on 2 July (old style) 1908, we read:
On the morning of 17 (30) June in
the village of Nizhne-Kerelinskoye (some 200 versts [215 km]
north of Kirensk) the peasants saw to the north-west, quite high
above the horizon, some body glowing with a bluish-white light
of exceptional strength (you could not keep your eyes on it),
moving downwards for ten minutes... Having approached the ground
(forest), the glowing body seemed to melt. An immense cloud of
black smoke formed in its place and an exceptionally loud noise
(not thunder) was heard, as if of falling stones or cannon-fire.
All the buildings shook. At the same time, flame of
indeterminate shape began to burst from the cloud...
Here is the account of S. B. Semionov,
who was in the village of Vanavara, 100 kilometers from the disaster
site:
...Suddenly, to the north, the sky
spilt apart and in it fire appeared, broad and high above the
trees, encompassing the whole northern part of the sky. At that
point I felt as hot as if my shirt had caught fire on me. I
wanted to shout out and tear my shirt off, but at that moment
[the sky] slammed shut and there was a tremendous bang. I was
hurled about three sagens across the ground. At the moment when
the sky opened, past the houses tore a hot wind, as if from a
cannon, leaving marks on the ground in the form of tracks and
damaging the full-grown onions. Then it turned out that many
panes had been broken in the windows and the iron hasp on the
barn door was broken...
P. P. Kosolapov, who was right by
Semionov at the time, felt his ears burning, although he did not
notice any light phenomena. Fifty kilometers from the explosion
site, people’s clothing smoldered from the unbearable heat that
suddenly flooded over them from somewhere in the cold taiga. Sixty
kilometers away, no-one could keep on their feet. Six hundred
kilometers away, the flash outshone the sun.
Compensatory Explosive Forces
The local inhabitants questioned by scientists investigating the
Tunguska explosion asserted that an instant before the terrible
flash, in places trees, yurts (nomadic dwellings) and sections of
soil from the hills were swept into the air, while in the rivers the
waves ran against the current. These observations are a direct
indication that what took place was a vacuum implosion,
sucking
everything towards its centre, while at the same time it had a
component operating in the opposite direction, since the trees at
the epicenters of the blasts fell outwards from the centre. This
difference in directions points to the use of a technology for
compensating explosive forces! The testimony of a number of
witnesses builds into a picture of a well-ordered distribution of
pressure from the blast wave.
The research materials and interviews contain a considerable number
of facts that specialists have failed to note—indications, for
example, that the jolts, noise and flash that accompanied the
explosions were described by witnesses either as terrible or as
insignificant (barely noticeable), although the settlements and
people from whom we have these accounts were only a small distance
apart.
There are accounts from a number of witnesses who were relatively
close to the explosion site, asserting that they did not notice any
powerful blasts at all and felt no earth tremors, while in some
settlements over 600 kilometers from the epicenter the houses shook,
window panes shattered and the walls of stoves cracked!
In other words, the main blast wave of the explosion was somehow
compensated in such a way that the fewest people suffered, although
it proved impossible to avoid casualties among animals (thousands of
reindeer perished) and people. Not everyone had heeded the shamans’
warnings and left the danger area.
This was not the first time that the researchers had come across the
use of a technology for compensating explosive forces. The processes
and consequences of the Tunguska explosion bear a certain similarity
to the explosion that took place on 12 April 1991 in Sasovo, some
500 kilometers south of Moscow. Detailed research has shown that in
both cases the main force of the blast wave and the consequences of
explosions of tremendous scale and power were shifted into a
different space (dimension)!
A specific indicator of the use of the technology for compensating
explosive forces is a characteristic sound preceding and completing
the stage of the main blast. In both the Tunguska and
Sasovo explosions (the latter left a gigantic crater, 28 x 3.5
meters,
right in the centre of the town), the crash of the explosion itself
was preceded and then turned again into a sound that a witness to
the Tunguska explosion described as "similar to the sound of the
wind, that went from north to south". Others spoke of it as being
like the noise a three-inch shell makes in the air. Note that this
sound preceded the explosion and then reappeared after it—a sound as
if something was flying away from the disaster site. In the Sasovo
incident, witnesses described the effect as the sound of a jet
aircraft falling or flying away!
Here is the account of a woman named Nikitina who worked at the
Sasovo railroad station:
Suddenly there was a growing roar;
the walls of the lookout tower, where I was at the time, shook.
Then came an explosion of monstrous force. The window panes fell
shattered to the floor...
Witnesses describe a noise then going
away from them.
Overall, we get the following sequence of events:
1. a growing roar (noise)
2. a powerful explosion
3. a bang like an aircraft going through the sound
barrier and a diminishing roar (a noise like a jet flying
away from the observer)
The use of compensatory technology
unequivocally suggests the involvement of intelligent forces
directing all that happened. If this had not been the case, the
consequences of the explosions would have been far more terrible and
devastating, probably costing the lives of thousands upon thousands
of unsuspecting people!
The first blow was struck downwards on the Tunguska
meteorite by a
terminator that had been awaiting it and caught the meteorite at a
height of about 10,000 meters. The explosion was accompanied by a
blinding flash that caused radiation burns to vegetation and a fire
in a zone 25 kilometers in radius.
Diagram from the
periodical Tekhnika i Molodezh (no. 1, 1984), showing the location
of witnesses and the trajectories of "terminator spheres" taken for
the meteorite as reported to researchers Suslov (1), Astapovich (2),
Krinov (3), Konenkin (4) and Fast (6).
Number 5 indicates the
trajectory determined by the expeditions that visited the blast site
on the basis of the direction of the fallen trees.
Time-space Distortions
The gigantic electromagnetic discharge that occurred at the moment
of this terminator’s impact caused a remagnetisation of the soils,
producing an extremely strong effect on the environment and the
space-time structure of the blast site—leading to a change in the
flow of physical time that, decades later, was observed by
scientific expeditions in the area. The distortion of time-space by
means of a powerful electromagnetic discharge is a component of the
compensatory technology!
If we take into account the use of this same electromagnetic field
by UFOs to distort the structure of time-space in order to shift
into different dimensions, then various characteristic features of
the accounts given by Tunguska witnesses enable us to take a new
look at the events in question, revealing fascinating details that
have hitherto escaped the attention of researchers.
Here is the story of Ivan Kurkagyr, the son of a Tunguska witness.
It contains a curious account of how, at the moment of the blast—a
powerful electromagnetic discharge that caused a distortion of
shape—some people and animals were instantaneously shifted to
different places. In other words, they were transferred in space!
…Many tents stood together. In the
morning, thunder could be heard. An incredibly noisy storm
broke. It smashed the tents, carried people through the air.
People found themselves away in the marsh. They could not
understand... how they had been taken over there. The storm that
set fire to the taiga also consumed their reindeer. Fire spread.
One man’s tent stood there. This fellow wanted to go home. He
had money in his tursuk [felt bag]. Seeing the fire, he dashed
to take the money. He ran to the river, towards the tents. The
fire was eating the tents [of his neighbors]. The people threw
themselves into the river. The fire passed across the water.
Those in the river caught alight. They dived, but the fire set
alight even the divers, burning their heads. In that way they
all died...
There is one more indicator of a
powerful effect on the time-space structure in the blast area. At
the moment of the explosion, the sky somehow opened and
people could
see outer space—the starry firmament—beyond!
A. S. Kosolapova, the daughter of S. B. Semionov, said when
questioned by Krinov in 1930:
I was 19 years old and at the time
of the meteorite fall I was at the Vanavara trading post.
Marfa Briukhanova and I had gone to the spring for water.
Marfa began
drawing water and I stood by her, facing north. At that moment,
I saw in front of me to the north the sky open to the very earth
and a burst of fire. We were scared and I only managed to say,
"Why has the sky opened in daytime? I’ve heard of the sky
opening at night, but never during the day", when the sky closed
again and after that we heard bangs, like shots...
At the time of the first strike, several
terminator spheres were waiting in the area, hanging in one place
and searing the tops of the trees and other vegetation with their
high-frequency energy. In these final minutes before the culminating
event, several more terminators rushed to the area (which was later
named after Kulik).
Many who saw the fiery spheres fly across the sky said that their
movement was accompanied by a dazzlingly bright light and strong
heat radiation. Note how this event appeared to the admiring teller
of the Olonkho:
Kiun Erbiie Uncatchable in flight, Shadowless, The fast herald—messenger of the heavenly
Dyesegei, Glittering in his mail, Flying faster than the lightning bolts,
Kium Erbiie the champion. He flew, A falling star, Only the air whistled behind him... He flew like an arrow
Beyond the bounds Of the western yellow skies, To the lower steep slope Of the heavens hanging above the abyss. He flew at a height— Only the thunder pealed… A blue fire blazed behind him, A white fire raged in his wake, Red sparks hovered in a swarm,
A glow flared in the clouds... |
It is a remarkable fact that "the bounds
of the western yellow skies" means precisely the area of the
Podkamennaya Tunguska!
Meteorite Fragments
In order to picture the subsequent course of events, you need to
have a precise idea of the relationships between the height of the
first explosion (10,000 meters above the ground), the size of the
areas of uprooted trees (many times larger than height) and the
distance (hundreds of kilometers) that the pieces of the fragmented
meteorite flew. (The interval between the explosions is the time
taken for the remnants to fly from one blast area to another.)
Above the Shishkov blast area, the meteorite had broken into several
parts. The fragments scattered in different directions, but
terminator spheres bearing down from different sides caught and
destroyed them. This is the reason why, on the one hand, in the
areas of uprooted trees researchers have found several epicenters
marked by trunks felled in different directions, while, on the other
hand, all the witnesses spoke of hearing first a terribly powerful
explosion (the fragmentation) and then, over the course of five to
six minutes, something like an artillery cannonade (the "mopping-up"
of the small pieces).
After the terminator hit the meteorite
above the Shishkov site, large pieces of the surviving meteorite
substance continued by inertia to move along the original trajectory
to the area of the Kulik blast site. Having lost speed and energy,
the fragments covered the distance of 120 to 150 kilometers in about
15 minutes (the speed of a jet aircraft), after which there was a
second powerful explosion. The terminators that flew into this area
struck the fragments coming from the Shishkov site.
Yegor Ankudinov, an inhabitant of the village of Berezovo in
Nizhne-Ilimsk district, Irkutsk region, was with his father and
uncle at the time, felling pines in the forest to make a house. He
recalled:
It was a beautiful day. We had just
had breakfast and begun cutting wood. Suddenly there was a bang
from somewhere close by. The ground started shaking and dry
branches fell off the trees. Then, a little later, there was
another thunderclap: the same, only far, far away, somewhere off
to the north...
The Krasnoyarets newspaper of 13 July
1908 reported:
Kezhemskoye village.
On 17th (30th)
at 7 am, a noise was heard as if a strong wind was blowing.
Immediately afterwards there was a terrible bang, accompanied by
an earth tremor that caused the buildings to literally shake and
giving the impression that the building had been delivered a
powerful blow by some huge log or heavy stone. The first blow
was followed by a second, equally strong, then a third. In the
interval between the first and second there was an unusual
subterranean rumbling, like the sound rails might make if 10
trains were running on them at once. Then for 5–6 minutes there
was something exactly like artillery fire: some 50–60 bangs at
short, almost identical, intervals. Gradually the last bangs
grew weaker. One and a half or two minutes after the end of the
continuous "firing", six more bangs were heard, one after
another, resembling distant cannon-shots but still distinctly
audible and tangible by the shaking of the ground...
The gigantic plasma spheres crashed into
the meteorite fragments, releasing a colossal amount of energy in
order to destroy the cosmic intruder with all its contents. When we
came to assess the probability of a large number of small fragments
being produced by the smashing of the meteorite, the suggestion was
put forward that the terminators’ electromagnetic charge possessed a
specific property. The vector (charge) of a terminator’s magnetic
field forced all the small remnants to become magnetically attached
to it, and then everything was destroyed by the energy of the next
explosion.
It is possible that above the Shishkov (zone 1) or
Kulik (zone 2)
sites, two large pieces detached from the meteorite by the explosion
were thrown 100 kilometers to the right (zones 4 and 5)—where
terminators caught up with them and literally reduced them to dust.
The energy of the "terminator spheres" was so powerful that apart
from electromagnetic radiation between the Earth and the
"terminators" there were also powerful electrical discharges
(lightning).
The direction of the
fallen tree trunks at the epicenter of the explosion.
Take this eyewitness account. On the
morning of 30 June, the brothers Chuchancha and Chekaren from the
Shaniagir clan were sleeping in their tent which was pitched
alongside the River Avarkitty. They were awoken by powerful tremors
and a loud whistling of the wind:
Chekaren and I climbed out of our
bags and were on the point of scrambling out of the tent, when
suddenly there was a very powerful thunderclap. That was the
first bang. The ground began jumping and shaking; a mighty wind
struck our tent and knocked it over… Then I saw a terrible
wonder: the trunks of the trees falling, the needles burning on
them, the dry brushwood burning, the reindeer moss burning.
There was smoke everywhere; our eyes were sore. It was very hot,
hot enough to burn to death. Suddenly, above the hill where the
forest had already fallen, it became very bright and... as if
another sun had appeared... it hurt your eyes and I even closed
mine. And immediately there was a mighty thunderclap. That was
the second bang. It was a sunny morning, cloudless. Our sun was
shining brightly, as always, and here this second sun appeared!
After that we saw, apparently
somewhere up above but in a different place, there was another
flash and again a mighty crash. That was the third bang. A wind
struck us, knocked us off our feet, struck the felled tree
trunks.
We watched the falling trees, saw how their tops broke and
looked at the fire. Suddenly Chekaren shouted, "Look up!" and
pointed. I looked and saw a bolt of lightning. It flashed and
again struck, making a great thunderclap. But the crash was a
little less than before. That was the fourth bang, like ordinary
thunder... Now it’s come back to me that there was one more
bang, a fifth, but it was little and somewhere far off...
Later researchers noted that the closer
they got to the epicenter, the more trees they found which had been
struck by lightning. At the epicenter, there are places where
80 per
cent of the trees have suffered lightning strikes. This is also
confirmed by the discoveries made by scientists from Novosibirsk who
proved that the initial uprooting of trees was caused by a radial
blast. They concluded that a body had exploded whose linear
dimensions were no more than a few dozen meters and that it was only
subsequent explosions that muddied the picture of the original
radial event.
Specialists have assessed that the electrical discharges rent the
air for between two and 15 minutes, creating the aural impression of
artillery fire, while all that time their source remained above the
epicenter and was not moving with gigantic speed. In other words,
the body arrived, stopped and affected the locality below it in a
host of ways, e.g., with radiation, temporal distortions,
mutations…
The bulk of the Tunguska meteorite was destroyed above the
Kulik
site, but one piece "escaped" and flew on another 120
kilometers
before falling to earth. The methodical destruction of everything
that belonged to the meteorite would suggest it was carrying some
sort of bacteria or viruses dangerous to life on Earth. Therefore,
one of the terminators plunged into the ground, and on the ground
finished off the remnants of the Tunguska meteorite, causing a
powerful earthquake. The result was a gigantic crater at the final
landing place of the meteorite—a hole 200 meters in diameter and 20
meters deep, which was later named "Voronov’s crater".
Vakulin, the head of the Nizhne-Ilimsk postal department, reported
in a letter dated 28 July 1908:
On Tuesday 17 June, around 8 am
(clocks not checked), according to a large number of local
inhabitants they first noticed to the northwest a fireball
descending at an angle to the horizon from east to west, which
as it approached the ground turned into a pillar of fire and
instantly vanished. After its disappearance, a cloud of smoke
could be seen rising from the ground in that direction.
After a few minutes, there was a loud noise in the air with
distant dull reports like peals of thunder. These bangs were
followed by eight loud bangs, like artillery shots. The very
last bang was accompanied by a whistling and was especially
powerful, causing the ground and buildings to shake...
Some witnesses stated that the bang made
people fall down; many lost consciousness and did not recover it for
days. The blast knocked horses to their knees, but they did not
bolt—indicating that the animals were badly scared. In some places,
cracks appeared in the ground.
Further support for the idea that the destroyed meteorite was
carrying dangerous micro-organisms is the evidence that after its
destruction the Installation scanned the Earth’s surface for
remnants of meteorite matter. The dazed witnesses reported observing
terminators flying above the crash site until the evening of 30
June! These terminator spheres—or "secondary meteors",
as they have
been interpreted by researchers—were seen by about half of all
observers.
Continued next issue ...
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